Boy is it tough picking only 1 episode from seasons 4-6. So many great Ed Wood films too. There's no arguing the merits of your list -- I'm just trying to provide some reinforcement. The toughest choice was Season 9, where I almost picked Final Sacrifice... but I think Q of the DK deserves much more love than it usually gets!

Which is too bad that they didn't give Plan 9 from Outer Space the go-ahead, since RiffTrax did just that (and for one of their live shows, too).

DeltaPunch:There's no arguing the merits of your list -- I'm just trying to provide some reinforcement. The toughest choice was Season 9, where I almost picked Final Sacrifice... but I think Q of the DK deserves much more love than it usually gets!

No, I dig, I follow, totally. It's just as how there's no arguing the merits of YOUR list.

Season 9 *was* a toughie. That spot could just as easily have been filled by Werewolf or Hobgoblins or The Final Sacrifice or even underappreciated titles like The Deadly Bees and Devil Fish.

Toshiro Mifune's Letter Opener:Season 9 *was* a toughie. That spot could just as easily have been filled by Werewolf or Hobgoblins or The Final Sacrifice or even underappreciated titles like The Deadly Bees and Devil Fish.

Toshiro Mifune's Letter Opener:Season 9 *was* a toughie. That spot could just as easily have been filled by Werewolf or Hobgoblins or The Final Sacrifice or even underappreciated titles like The Deadly Bees and Devil Fish.

I forgot about a lot of those. Hobgoblins was great. "It's the eighties. Do a lot of coke and vote for Ronald Reagan."

The Killer Bees was a little dry but WTF was the guy in the bowler hat who showed up during the closing credits?

PacManDreaming:On a side note, anyone that thinks Plan 9 From Outer Space is the worst movie ever hasn't seen Monster A-Go Go. It's a study in exactly what you shouldn't do when making a movie.

Plan 9 might have technically been terrible but Ed Wood truly loved movies and movie making. So maybe he sucked at it but he tried. I would say he was a better filmmaker than cynical farks like Michael Bay and Uwe Boll.

Mugato:I forgot about a lot of those. Hobgoblins was great. "It's the eighties. Do a lot of coke and vote for Ronald Reagan."

Hobgoblins was surreal in its badness. It left you wondering certain things during the viewing, namely: "Am I really watching this? Someone ACTUALLY made this?"

The Killer Bees was a little dry but WTF was the guy in the bowler hat who showed up during the closing credits?

I think he was one of the officials seen during the movie's prologue.

It's something of what TV Tropes would call a Brick Joke, in that the gov't received news about the crazy bee farm, and it's only at the end of the movie that they send someone to respond.

I think.

PacManDreaming:Monster A-Go Go is a must see only for the Circus on Ice short that precedes it.

Monster A-Go-Go is also worth it for the phone noise.

And Servo's "pear-shaped" riff towards the beginning is absolute gold.

PacManDreaming:On a side note, anyone that thinks Plan 9 From Outer Space is the worst movie ever hasn't seen Monster A-Go Go. It's a study in exactly what you shouldn't do when making a movie.

What hurt it was the fact that it was essentially two movies stapled together. It's a Frankenmovie.

From the IMDB:

"Director Bill Rebane began shooting the film in 1961, but ran out of money. Years later, director Herschell Gordon Lewis bought the incomplete film to team it with Moonshine Mountain as a double feature. Lewis filmed some additional footage, added narration (which he did himself), and released it in 1965. Many of the actors didn't come back for later filming, which explains why most of the characters disappear without explanation. One actor changed so much that he ended up playing his own brother."

I don't really know the names of titles, but my favorites are Puma Man and the one where a time traveler goes back to the Revolutionary War. Jack Frost is good, Space Ghost, and there's a beach monster one I enjoy but can't say much more than that except it led to Mike wearing a tiny speedo.

There's one where a woman says "My tray-sure!" and they riff on it for the rest of the movie...I still think about that when I hear the word treasure, measure, etc.